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Pennsylvania’s 1st Winter Atlas Needs Your Help

Earlier in 2024 Pennsylvania birders of all ages and skill levels began working together to map the breeding and status of bird species in the state as part of the 3rd Pennsylvania Bird Atlas (PBA3), a 5-year-long survey that will end February 2029.

The PBA3 will include Pennsylvania’s first Winter Atlas which will set an important baseline for data on the distribution and abundance of the state’s winter avifauna.

The Winter Survey began December 1, 2024, and most of the data will be collected by volunteers. For directions on how to participate in the Winter Survey, get the Winter Atlas Volunteer Handbook, read how to complete Winter Priority Blocks and conduct Winter Water Surveys specifically for the Winter Atlas, watch the recording of November’s Atlas Town Hall - Introduction to Winter Atlas.

This project is supported by the PA Game Commission (PGC), headquartered at Hawk Mountain, and facilitated by Cornell Lab’s eBird online tools. The PGC initiated this project to update the information they need to prioritize conservation actions and to protect the birds of Pennsylvania. Findings will guide conservation for years to come. Read the PA Bird Atlas 3 Volunteer Handbook to learn how to participate during the other seasons.

In addition to volunteers, Pennsylvania Bird Atlas is hiring a team of seasonal point count technicians to conduct surveys throughout Pennsylvania during the summer of 2025.
Deadline to Apply to be a Paid Seasonal Research Technician for Pennsylvania Bird Atlas:
April 18, 2025, but applications will be reviewed upon receipt

Employment Dates: May 19 – mid July 2025

Preference will be given to applicants with previous point count experience and eBird experience. Prior birding experience need not be through a paid position, but ability to identify birds of Pennsylvania by sight and sound required.

Read all the job details and how to apply here.

Purple Martins at Minsi Lake

Jim Wilson, Recreation & Conservation Specialist, Northampton County Parks

Originally Published in July - September 2024 Quarterly Newsletter of The Lehigh Valley Audubon Society

There were no Purple Martins nesting at Minsi Lake before 2020.

Purple Martin project at Minsi Lake

Since Northampton County Parks Martin Habitat Partnership initiative with LVAS was begun in 2020 with Mike McCartney, Scott Burnett, and Tim Kita, the success of this species at Minsi Lake has been phenomenal. Thanks to LVAS volunteers, a large and growing Purple Martin colony can now be seen at Minsi.

Over the past five years, five 18-unit condo towers have been installed. Occupancy this nesting season in those condos (36 of which are new this season) is over 90% with nesting pairs in 80 of the 90 condo units. At Minsi Lake, it really is a build it and they will come situation. The lake provides an ideal habitat for these birds of greatest conservation need—a shallow, warm water lake teeming with dragonflies and other food sources.

There is lakeside space at Minsi for eight more 18-unit Purple Martin nesting towers.

Northampton County Parks and Recreation will fund three more towers at the Lake for next year’s nesting season, and Friends of Minsi Lake will have funding for the remaining five towers.

The expanded Purple Martin project at Minsi Lake means more volunteers will be needed to maintain and monitor the nesting condos over time. The Northampton County Parks and Recreation and LVAS partnership now manages 108 condos in six nesting towers—five at Minsi Lake Park and one at Louise Moore Park. Next year, they’ll be tasked with 144 units, which the small team of dedicated volunteers have agreed to do. If the Purple Martins indicate there’s continued need for nesting cavities at Minsi, up to five more towers will be provided the following year—for a total of 13 Purple Martin condo towers and 234 units to maintain and monitor from March through September.

Maintenance involves removing the PVC nesting gourds from their towers after each season, hosing them out and storing them at a nearby Parks and Rec facility. The gourds are then brought back to the lake in late winter. Pine straw is placed in each condo and the condos are attached to the towers in numeric order for recording nesting data in each unit throughout the spring and summer.

Monitoring during the nesting season requires one or two volunteers to visually check each of the 18 condos hanging from the towers by lowering and raising the racks. Observations are then recorded on a datasheet that is eventually shared with several national databases to track Purple Martins and the community and citizen conservation science needed to sustain them here in the East.

After hatching, only federally licensed bird banders can physically handle and weigh, measure and band the Purple Martin chicks when they are several weeks old. Volunteers are still needed to shuttle chicks in baskets back and forth from their nests to the banding station set up next to the towers.

Northampton County Parks and Recreation needs LVAS continued support to help with installation labor, monitoring, maintenance, winter storage, and, of course, all the banding and data collection done each nesting season. If anyone is interested in volunteering their time to this project in 2025 and subsequent years, please send an email to James Wilson, Recreation & Conservation Specialist for Northampton County Parks, at jwilson@norcop.gov.

LVAS Donates Birding Backpacks

Barbara Malt

Originally Published in January - March 2024 Quarterly Newsletter of The Lehigh Valley Audubon Society

LVAS recently donated four birding backpacks to the children’s room at the Allentown Public Library. Each knapsack contains a field guide, a child-friendly pair of 6x Kowa binoculars, and simple instruction sheets in English and Spanish . Many thanks to our partners who helped make this possible: Lehigh Gap Nature Center for design/layout and Spanish translations, LL Bean for donating the knapsacks, and Kowa for donating the binoculars! What a team effort!

If you live in Allentown or any municipality that has library privileges with Allentown, you can check out a birding knapsack for up to three weeks. Parents and teachers out there, please alert any child or parent who may be interested!

Photo of LVAS Board Member, Barbara Malt Delivering Birding Backpacks to Allentown Public Library

Photo of LVAS Board Member, Barbara Malt, delivering Birding Backpacks to Allentown Public Library

LIGHTS OUT – PART 2

Peter Saenger

Originally Published in April - June 2023 Quarterly Newsletter of The Lehigh Valley Audubon Society

Bird-window Collisions

Audubon Lights Out Image, Minneapolis

We live in a world where we can research anything with the simple click of a button. This is a wonderful thing to be able to do, but we must also realize that not everything we find is fact or current. This holds true when you do a search of the web for bird-window collisions. You can find a wide range of facts, half-truths, urban legends, and just out-right wrong information. It can be difficult to sort through all this and to know what is correct or not.

The first misconception to address is: Big cities with very tall buildings and bright lights are the biggest danger to birds colliding with glass. A recent peer-reviewed, published paper states that only one percent of the 365 million to one billion annual collisions in the US occur at tall buildings four stories or greater.

Backing up a bit, I’d like to look at the numbers. Way back in 1979, Dr. Daniel Klem estimated between one hundred million to one billion birds collide with glass in the US annually. More recently in 2012, Dr. Scott Loss, with a team of others and with 40 years of additional data, updated the estimate to between 365 million to one billion. Big numbers! I, myself and assume others, just can’t wrap my mind around said numbers; too big to comprehend easily. If you use the low number of 365 million collisions annually and compare it to the population of the US, it would be greater than the population of the 200 largest cities. Think about that; New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, Phoenix, Philadelphia, and on and on! Still too big for my brain! How about using the median number of 599 collisions annually, which statistically should be the most accurate. Nope. Ok, how about using the low estimate, and see that it conveniently divides by the number of days in a year to one million a day. Still a big number, but think about this; on average, one million birds collide with our windows each and every day, year after year! That is a very sobering fact.

Now, if only one percent of those one million daily collisions occur at high-rise buildings, where is the other 99% happening? The remaining 990,000 daily collisions are split almost equally between our homes and low-rise buildings four stories or less. Just think about the millions upon millions of homes, and thousands of corporate centers, colleges, etc., spread out across this country.

The good news is, this means that 495,000 daily collisions occur at residential homes where any caring homeowner can treat their windows to prevent collisions. But why then, aren’t more of us doing so? Do homeowners need permission? Nope. Don’t they care; is it too expensive? Or, is it the simple fact that most are simply unaware, or don’t think their home is part of the problem. I have been told hundreds of times, “We have never had a collision at our home” or “we only have one or two a year, and they fly off.” So, no big deal. Right? Nope, not right. Think of how many homes are out there and if each one only has one or two collisions a year, how quickly the numbers add up. I don’t believe I’ve ever not found evidence of a collision at any home with untreated windows, with decent habitat around them. Two more sobering facts to keep in mind. One, research has shown that up to 50% of all collisions leave no evidence. No bodies, no marks on the glass; nothing. And two, in conversations with a number of rehabilitators and veterinarians, and reviewing a recent study, it is speculated that more than 50% of collision victims die after flying away. This includes the bird that was stunned, lying on your deck for a few minutes, then flew away. As well as those that bounce off the glass, flying away immediately, not appearing to be hurt at all. They die out of sight from concussions and unseen internal injuries. Fifty percent leave no evidence, and up to 50% die later. How many birds did your house kill last year?

People are simply unaware, and this is where Lights Out efforts offer so many benefits. They save energy, they help preserve our view of the night sky, etc., and they bring collisions to people’s attention. Then, of course there are the bird lives that they save. Even if the mass collisions only occur infrequently, they can save thousands in a single night. How many homeowners do we need to convince to treat their windows to save thousands of bird lives Thousands. An uphill battle for sure. I see Lights Out efforts as a springboard to educating people of the problem.

When a city goes dark, how many people did it take to agree to doing so? How many people notice and ask why? How much media attention does it get? I am thinking a huge number of people learn about the collision problem for the first time because of Lights Out programs. This is the perfect opportunity to work together to educate not only on the problem of bright lights, but also on the problem of the one and two birds killed at houses around big cities, in the endless urban and suburban sprawl. Don’t forget what I said in Part One, that even if there is not a mass mortality event in downtown, thousands can die in a single day, if the bright lights confuse our birds, causing them to descend into the surrounding sprawl. There, at dawn they face the reflections of sky and habitat on our windows.

If you care or even have just a casual interest in learning more, I would suggest reading Dr. Daniel Klem’s recent book, Solid Air, found at: https://www.hancockhouse.com/products/solid-air. Written in the style of Silent Spring, so an easy and informative read for the general public, as well as any professional wanting to better understand the problem. We have developed materials to help educate people on this subject and I’m offering to help anyone interested in learning more. I can be reached by email at psaenger@muhlenberg.edu, and you can also visit our website at: http://aco.muhlenberg.edu

Turn off the lights, treat those windows, and save our birds!

Dr Klem's book, SOLID AIR, describes the cause and breadth of bird window collisions and how to solve it. Copies can be purchased from the publisher at: hancockhouse.com/products/ solid-air

LIGHTS OUT – PART 1

Peter Saenger

Originally Published in January - March 2023 Quarterly Newsletter of The Lehigh Valley Audubon Society

LIGHTS OUT Programs: Do they help and is it worth the effort? The short answer is YES! But, it’s not that simple.

Audubon Lights Out Image, Minneapolis

On the night of the first and morning of the second of October 2020, over a thousand birds died in Philadelphia colliding with glass in a small block radius in downtown. Totally tragic and mostly preventable. But reading the news reports, one stated that a similar event had not happened there in the past 70 years.

The first thing people need to understand is why these mass collision events occur. It takes three major factors to occur simultaneously, a perfect storm, to cause a mass collision event. During migration, nocturnal migrants usually choose clear nights with favorable winds. The favorable winds the birds look for can occur at very high altitudes (10,000+ ft), but in general it is safe to say that most are flying 1,000’s of feet above the landscape for most of their journey. On these clear nights nocturnal migrants are far above and safe from the effects of city lights. However, when nocturnal migrants fly into less than favorable weather conditions like low, heavy clouds, fog, and precipitation, which can force them to fly lower, their troubles begin. If you have tens of thousands of migrants already on the move run into these unfavorable conditions and they are near or over a city with bright lights, this is when and where mass collisions are possible. Imagine driving along a highway on a clear day and suddenly being hit by either a heavy downpour or a heavy snow squall. You can go from being able to see fine to being totally blind in seconds. A better example of what the birds can experience is driving along on a clear night and running into a thick fog bank with blinding reflections of white.

So, for a mass collision event to occur, three things must come together:

1) Large concentration of migrants,

2) Inclement weather, and

3) A bright city nearby.

This is why even nationwide these events are not reported annually.

This is not to say that thousands of birds are not forced down more often, into the surrounding neighborhoods and suburban areas, only to face the uncountable windows at dawn, as well as outdoor cats and the multitude of other human caused hazards. There, when a bird dies here and there, even if thousands die in a single morning, they go mostly unnoticed. Mass events in downtown areas occur where sidewalks don’t hide the dead and dying, hundreds of people witness this, and reporters document it. The casualties spread out through large areas with vegetation often hiding the bodies are simply not counted.

The annual USA death toll due to bird-window collisions is between 365 million to one billion. Using the LOW estimate equals an average of one million a day. A peer-reviewed, scientific paper stated that 54% of window collisions occurred at low-rise buildings like college and corporate campuses, 45% occur at residential homes, and only 1% occur at high-rise buildings.

Back to the question, are Lights Out programs worthwhile? Yes, is the clear answer because they save bird lives, save dollars, and help reduce light pollution. Even if a city has had few or even no mass mortality events in a downtown area, there have probably been many mass fallouts when thousands of migrants have descended prematurely due to inclement weather into habitat less than prime for them and containing the many hazards, we humans have created.

A city with a Lights Out program can save thousands of lives in a season. The next step is to get people to treat their windows in the surrounding jungle of glass, to prevent the much greater number of birds that die there, unnoticed and uncounted. Remember, 1% of the millions of deaths occur at high-rise buildings, and the other 99% occur where individuals can make a difference.

Think, a minimum of 45% or 164,250,000 birds die at windows every year that do not need anyone’s permission to make bird-friendly, but YOU. Do you care, really?

Read More in LIGHTS OUT - PART 2